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Show THE CITIZEN 16 one of his fits of rage, tore It away from her and threw, it In the lire. This letter was to lead to the supreme tragedy of Ceclles life, if we are to trust the information presented to us in this book. We are told that on one occasion when she was feeling lonely she took the letter from its bag and was so deep in contemplation that she did not observe that the crown prince had entered the room and that he had been drinking deeply: What are you looking at? he asked her. Nothing, nothing, she replied, taken so much aback by the sudden appearance of her husband that she did not know what to say in her confusion. What do you mean by nothing? It was a letter you were reading; show It to me. I will not, replied the princess, whose It does presence of mind was returning. not concern you, and it is not a letter received now; it is quite an old one. and managed to rescue the princess, who fled to her own rooms, but not without having seen the letter she had carried about for so long a time, and considered as her most cherished posses ison, thrown into the fire that was blazing in the large French chimney in the hall. This fearful scene occurred at Dant-ziand Ceclle Immediately fled to her mother at Geneva. She was practically arrested by order of the kaiser and taken back to Berlin, but she was received graciously and promised protection. g, IRVIN COBB'S LAUGH. Irvin Cobb, known wherever people laugh, got his start on a Paducah, Ky., newspaper. One night two Paducahns were going home late and as they wandered up the deserted Main street, they heard roars of Brobdignagian laugh ists of our own day. In a burst of en- thusiasm Clive Bell recently dclared that there are in England today only two people who know how to use their language Thomas Hardy ' and The Voyage Out, Virginia Woolf. the novel that first drew the attention of discriminating critics to Mrs. Woolf, was published in 1915. More recently Mrs. Woolf published Kew illustrated by Vanessa Gardens, Bell; while her latest work has won an ardent tribute from the conservative critic of the London Times. Writing to the New York Sun,. Hugh Walpole characterizes the genius of the new fictlonlst as erratic and at times unrestrained. She seemed to be more interested in the abnormal than the normal. She is of that school in whose eyes to be happy is the most inartistic thing possible, and to be original is of more importance than to be true but she is greater than her school and will assuredly cot be bound by its limitations.' Mrs. Woolf, we read in the N. Y. Globe, is the daughter of the late Sir Leslie Stephen, evidently by his second marriage with Mrs. Duckworth, the wife of the London publisher. SHE WAS GENEROUS. vouchers to the undersigned at 151 South Main street, in Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 20th day of March, A. D. 1920. TRACY LOAN & TRUST COMPANY, Administrator of the estate of Mary C. White, Deceased. ROGERS & HAAS, 17, A. D. 1920. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate of Charles L. Merritt, deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 517-1- 8 Atlas building, Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 20th day of March, A. D. 1920. A. S. FOWLER, Administrator of the Estate of Charles L. Merritt, Deceased. BOOTH, LEE BADGER & RICH, Attorneys for Adminstrator. Date of first publication, January 17, A. D. 1920. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate of James .D. Dunlap, deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at No. 309 Judge Building, at Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the fifth day of April; A. D. 1920. JOHN M. DUNLAP, Administrator Estate of James D. Dunlap, Deceased. E. V. Higgins, Attorney for Administrator. Date of first publication, Married SCENE FROM THE SMASHING, LAUGHING SUCCESS "UP IN MABELS ROOM" AT THE SALT LAKE THEATRE, FEBRUARY 2, 3, AND 4. An old one that you carry on your heart Why do you lie? angrily exShow me claimed the Crown Prince. the paper; show it to me, he thundered. I will not, answered his wife, who by this time had risen from the armchair in which she had been reclining; "it does not concern you, and, besides, you would not understand it What do you mean by that? Do you think that I am an idiot, that I could not understand what is written on that paper? Once more, will you give it to me? It must be something very precious to you that you carry it next to your heart. Ceclle simply walked towards the door without replying, but the Crown Prince, who was decidedly the worse for drink, seized her by the arm with such violence that he nearly threw her on her knees. You are going to give me this letter, he screamed, and, tearing it from the clasped fingers of his wife, he perused jts contents with eagerness. So,'' he said, after a pause, whilst the terrified princess crouched against the door, this is a pretty state of things. You are having a secret correspondence with a man whom I do not know, and you are complaining to him about me. Well, you shall have reason to complain now, because I am going to chastise you as you deserve. He seized her once more by the arm, and, getting hold of a riding whip which happened to be lying on the table of the hall where he dragged her, he began raining blows upon the shoulders, back and even f.ce of the miserable Ceclle, whose screams awoke the servants. They, thinking that something dreadful had happened, came rushing from their rooms below. The butler threw himself upon the prince ter coming from the "Banner office. This was the only building lighted and they recognized the laugh as bed Irvin longing to big, fat, Cobb. To get in on the joke, they crossed the street and peeked in at good-nature- the window. There sat Cobb, who had written a stack of letters, and before him, on his haunches on the floor, was a big, overgrown Newfoundland dog. Cobb picked up a stamp, held It out to the dog, who thrust out his huge tongue and licked it, wagging his tail the while in utter friendliness, whereupon Cobb would stick the stamp on the letter, lean back and roar with laughter, and then repeat the per-- , formance. The two night roaming Paducahns laughed, too, and although Cobb has framed many funny situations since that time, they will tell you he never evolved such a ludicrous whimsicality as that of the huge dog licking those tiny postage stamps. WOMAN NOVELI8T HAILED. couples should yield to one anothers opinions to get along, said the sober-face- d man. I dunno, It didn't work responded the other. in our case. I told my wife I wasn't worthy of her and she declared I was. For the sake of harmony I yielded my opinion and said I was worthy of her. And she, not to be outdone in generosity, I suppose, yielded her opinion and said I wasnt. PROBATE AND GUARDIANSHIP . NOTICES. Consult County Clerk or the Signers for Further information. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate of Benner X. Smith, deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at the office of Tracy Loan & Trust Com- pany, 151 South Main, Salt Lake City, on or before the 10th day of June, a D. 1920. Administrators of Estate of Benner X. Smith, Deceased. Frank B. Stephens, Attorney for tate. Date of first publication January Es- 31, NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate of Fernando E. Inebnit, deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at suite 313 Atlas block. Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 22nd day of March, A. D. 1920. FREDERIK INEBNIT, Administrator of the estate of nando Inebnit, Deceased. Fer- MARKS & JENSEN, Although only a few copies of the novels of Mrs. Virginia Woolf have as yet reached our country, this brilliant Englishwoman is greeted by English and American critics as one of the most promising and Important novel A. D. 1920. Attorneys for Administrator. Date of first publication, January 17, A. D. 1920. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate of Mary C. White, deceased. Creditors will present claims with Jan. 31, . NOTICE. In the District Court, Probate Division, in and for Salt Lake County, State of Utah. In the Matter of the Estate of Osgood King Pratt, Deceased. Notice. The petition of Oland K. Pratt, administrator of the estate of Osgood Pratt, King deceased, praying for the settlement of final account of said administrator and for the distribution of the residue of the estate, to the persons entitled, and discharge of administrator, has been set for hearing on Friday, the 20th day of February, A. D. 1920, at two oclock p. m., at the County Court House in the Court Room of said Court in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. Witness the Clerk of said Court, with the seal thereof affixed, this 29th day of January, 1920. J. E. CLARK, Clerk. (Seal) M. M. By Snell, Deputy Clerk. C. Gordon Douglas, Attorney for Petitioner. NOTICE. MABEL MINER SMITH AND TRACY LOAN & TRUST COMPANY, A. D. 1920. , Attorneys for Administrator. Date of first publication, January In the District Court, Probate Division in and for Salt Lake County, State of Utah. In the matter of the estate of Charles J. Hatcher, Deceased. Notice. The petition of Angus McKellar, praying for the issuance to himself of Letters of Administration in the Estate of Charles J. Hatcher, deceased, has been set for hearing on Friday, the 20th day of February, A. D. 1920, at two oclock p. m., at the County Court House, in the Court Room of said court in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. Witness the Clerk of said Court, with the seal thereof affixed, this 23rd day of January, A. D. 1920. J. E. CLARK, Clerk. (Seal) M. M. My Snell, Deputy Clerk. McGurrin & Rydalch, Attorneys for Petitioner. NOTICE. In the District Court, Probate Divi- - |